Had a scary moment or ten today when I was taking my riding lesson on Tyr. Trainer had me doing lengthenings of stride today and I'm bopping along, things are going well and all of a sudden I hear this "slap, slap, slap" with every step Tyr makes. I start looking around to see where the noise is coming from, stop her and check my saddle to see if something is loose. Nothing there so by then, Trainer - being Trainer - is yelling "ok now down the long side and as we pass him, I hear that slap, slap sound and he hears it as well. Sounded just like a joint that was cracking.
Well I'm getting on up there in age and Ty is 17.1 hands but you never seen an old lady come off a horse so fast. I am thinking "OMG, she's cracked something, a joint has gone bad, something horrible has happened and I've broken my horse". Trainer comes over, checks all her leg joints, has me walk her in a straight line, no sound and we are standing there with these "What the heck is going on with this horse?" looks on our face.
So then he stands directly behind her and he says "her hoof", now I'm really panicking because no hoof, no horse. Then he starts laughing and says "look here, pulls her hoof up and her frog has almost completely shed but is held by a bit on both sides so when she walked, we didn't hear the "slap" but once she was step pacing, it sounded just like someone wearing flip flops.
Well the farrier was scheduled for right after my lesson so we walk Tyr back to the barn and the farrier came and said it was rather unusual for a frog to be shed in one complete piece like that, but no harm done and she has wonderful hooves. He also removed the other three frogs which were beginning to shed off.
In all my 40 years of riding horses and owning them, I have never seen a horse shed frogs so that they come off in one solid piece. So after being much relieved, my farrier gave me a lesson in how and why horses shed their frogs and assured me that Tyr was only doing what was natural, although in an unusual way. He told me that most horses will shed frogs a bit at a time and he hardly ever saw one that shed the frog in one piece and on all four hooves at the same time.
So next time you hear "slap, slap, slap" when your horse trots in wet grass..think frog first and not "OMG MY HORSE IS BROKEN".
but I feel like I'm broken now, my back bone feels like it compressed by three inches when I slid down that girl dismounting. Gravity is extra special when you are fifty!
Gotta love a horse that makes someone like me literally bound off the horse when I need a ladder to get on her.
She's a good pony!
Well I'm getting on up there in age and Ty is 17.1 hands but you never seen an old lady come off a horse so fast. I am thinking "OMG, she's cracked something, a joint has gone bad, something horrible has happened and I've broken my horse". Trainer comes over, checks all her leg joints, has me walk her in a straight line, no sound and we are standing there with these "What the heck is going on with this horse?" looks on our face.
So then he stands directly behind her and he says "her hoof", now I'm really panicking because no hoof, no horse. Then he starts laughing and says "look here, pulls her hoof up and her frog has almost completely shed but is held by a bit on both sides so when she walked, we didn't hear the "slap" but once she was step pacing, it sounded just like someone wearing flip flops.
Well the farrier was scheduled for right after my lesson so we walk Tyr back to the barn and the farrier came and said it was rather unusual for a frog to be shed in one complete piece like that, but no harm done and she has wonderful hooves. He also removed the other three frogs which were beginning to shed off.
In all my 40 years of riding horses and owning them, I have never seen a horse shed frogs so that they come off in one solid piece. So after being much relieved, my farrier gave me a lesson in how and why horses shed their frogs and assured me that Tyr was only doing what was natural, although in an unusual way. He told me that most horses will shed frogs a bit at a time and he hardly ever saw one that shed the frog in one piece and on all four hooves at the same time.
So next time you hear "slap, slap, slap" when your horse trots in wet grass..think frog first and not "OMG MY HORSE IS BROKEN".
but I feel like I'm broken now, my back bone feels like it compressed by three inches when I slid down that girl dismounting. Gravity is extra special when you are fifty!
Gotta love a horse that makes someone like me literally bound off the horse when I need a ladder to get on her.
She's a good pony!

